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San
Francisco, Fraenkel Gallery |
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Peter Hujar (1934-1987) paid his dues in commercial
photography--magazines, fashion, advertising--on his way to developing his own voice, his
own art which is striking in its directness, its disciplined focus and its astringent
avoidance of extraneous elements. His milieu was New York and the core of his work was
black-and-white portraiture of his friends, many of whom were drawn from the
intelligentsia as well as the gay subculture of the city.
The photographs in Fraenkel Gallery's current exhibit of Hujar's work
date from 1963 to 1982, so, as tempting as it might be to interpolate meanings related to
his death from AIDS, it would be forcing a point to do so. An awareness of mortality
surely is present here as might be expected even in an artist in the prime of his life.
There's a soulful 1974 portrait of Peggy Lee, elegantly dressed and coifed, heavy makeup
failing to disguise the no-longer-ingenue appearance of middle-age. And there are two
earlier pictures taken in the catacombs of Palermo. One is of a reclining skeleton, still
garbed in its funereal costume of ruffles and flowered headdress. The other is even
more startling, for the skeleton is erect--standing in its still preserved boots for
eternity.
Hujar seems to have had a preference for posing his subjects sitting or
reclining. A 1975 portrait of Susan Sontag, hands clasped behind her head as she lies back
somewhat dreamily, captures the strong jaw and chin; intelligence seems to radiate from
her face. William Burroughs, David Wajnarowicz (Hujar's lover), Divine--all are pictured
recumbent.
In his photographs of male nudes Hujar accomplishes something truly
extraordinary. Bruce de Saint Croix standing confidently before the camera, the
light bathing his slim, smooth body, his genitals emphasized by shadow; Daniel Schook,
Sucking Toe in a contortionist pose performing a somewhat odd self-pleasuring; the
more direct Masturbating Nude. These pictures exude masculine sexuality without
compromise, but also without any suggestion of pandering or pornographic exploitation. Nan
Goldin wrote that looking at Hujar's male nudes "is the closest I ever came to
experience what it is to inhabit male flesh."
Hujar captures and translates the sensual and the passionate into
finely wrought, psychologically perceptive images that retain a classic simplicity. His is
a subtle and refined art.
January 8, 2002 - Arthur Lazere